 Hi, I'm Maria Vazcanales, the Executive Director of the RETO CITALES. When it comes to artificial intelligence and inclusion, I think that we have a lot of issues in Latin America currently in having real access to data, information about what kind of data is collected by private companies or by governments that are starting to use this kind of technology and to learn in which way this data affects the decision making after affect the lives of the people in the region. As a lawyer, I think that for complete this task we need to go and be more effective in our advocacy work with the legislative bodies and also with the governments that are trying to implement this kind of technology for providing solutions to real problems of the people to provide some social services and other kind of things that the government are implementing this kind of technology. Many times there is a lot of excitement in Latin America to just rely in the new technology and the new thing that it's in hype but we think that this is not enough if you don't do this regulatory assessment from a human rights perspective that you need to be embedded in the design and implementation of this new type of technologies. First we need to have more actual research coming from academic institutions and that research needs to be connected with the work that activist organizations, society organizations are making for providing valuable information to the decision makers. So at the end there is a value in work together and presented a more multi-stakeholder approach in the decision making to help the implementation of this kind of technology that can influence the authorities that are deciding about.